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Land Girls - Season Three episode download. Watch online.

Land Girls - Season Three
Genres: Dr
Starring: Sophie Ward, David Schofield, Mark Benton, Danny Webb, Jo Woodcock, Liam Boyle, Carolyn Pickles
Director(s): Roland Moore
Country: UK
Year:2011
IMDB Rating: 6.4

Land Girls is a British television period drama series, first broadcast on BBC One on 7 September 2009. Land Girls was created by Roland Moore and commissioned by the BBC to commemorate the 70th anniversary of the outbreak of World War II. The programme was BBC Daytimes first commission of a period drama. Land Girls was filmed in and around the city of Birmingham. The first series features Summer Strallen, Christine Bottomley, Jo Woodcock and Becci Gemmell as four different girls doing their bit for Britain in the Womens Land Army during the War. Land Girls won the Best Daytime Programme at the 2010 Broadcast Awards and in that same year the BBC announced that it had commissioned a second series, comprising five episodes. Woodcock and Gemmell reprised their roles as Bea and Joyce and Seline Hizli made her debut as new girl, Connie Carter. The second series began airing from 17 January 2011 and two months later BBC Daytime Controller, Liam Keelan, renewed Land Girls for a third series. It began airing from 7 November 2011.

1 Land Girls - Season Three (DivX) Resolution: 624x352 px Total Size: 549 Mb
2 Land Girls - Season Three (DivX) Resolution: 624x352 px Total Size: 550 Mb
3 Land Girls - Season Three (DivX) Resolution: 624x352 px Total Size: 551 Mb
4 Land Girls - Season Three (DivX) Resolution: 624x352 px Total Size: 350 Mb
5 Land Girls - Season Three (DivX) Resolution: 624x352 px Total Size: 350 Mb

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Visitor Reviews: (2)

didi-5 20 May 2012

Watchable but a bit disappointing


Riddled with clichés, this daytime drama about the land girls (womenconscripted to work on the land during World War II) is in five partsand boasts a competent cast in a sanitised script - a very PC andsimplistic view of a country under siege.We first meet the four new land girls at the start of the first episode- snooty Nancy (Summer Strallen) who wears high heels and expects asoldier to carry her luggage from the station, sisters Annie (ChristineBottomley) and Bea (Jo Woodcock) - one bitter, one naive, and salt ofthe earth Joyce (Becci Gemmell) whose family were wiped out in theCoventry bombings. We also meet Esther (Susan Cookson), who keeps thegirls in order, black-marketeer and farmer Finch (Mark Benton), and theLord and Lady of the House (Nathaniel Parker and Sophie Ward).There's also a Home Guard Sergeant, Tucker (Danny Webb) who likes thefeeling of being in charge, and in town there's a group of GIs.From here it is very much ticking the boxes - there's an illicitaffair, a soldier going AWOL, suspected collaborators, a marriage basedon hate, and a bit of political correctness about black GIs andsegregation. It's watchable enough but somehow I was expecting a bitmore.Although it looks great and as if a bit of money has been thrown at it,Land Girls is historically shaky and very much has the air of 'we'veseen all this before'. A bit of a missed opportunity.

Veit 19 May 2012

Stir Well and Serve Cold


This program has very fine actors doing their best with woefullyinferior scripts. Every character is a stereotype of others we haveseen before. Time and time again they behave stupidly in order toadvance the plot and intensify the false sense of drama. Sorry, but itjust rings hollow and false. There are precious few honest steps takenthrough the course of "Land Girls." Instead, the audience ismanipulated, often with the use of modern PC sensibilities. I haveforced myself to watch all fifteen episodes, and it has not been aneasy chore. The scripts of Dominique Moloney, Dale Overton, PaulMatthew Thompson, Jude Tindall, Joy Wilkinson, and even series creatorRoland Moore fall flat, dumbed down to the shallowest of viewers.And then, in the midst of all this mediocrity, there comes a singlebrilliant episode that shows what might have been. Rob Kinsman haswritten a terrific script for "The Enemy Within," which is episode 3 ofseries 3. Here the dialogue crackles with intelligence. Suddenly, weare confronted with real people, not television templates. Afterwatching "The Enemy Within," I thought perhaps "Land Girls" had finallyfound its stride. But, alas, it was not meant to be. Back to the sameold predictability we go, and our patience is tested by stupidcharacters behaving stupidly. Clearly, this production should havehired Rob Kinsman from the start and stayed with him for the entirerun. Then they might have really had something to be proud of. As itis, all too often the result is embarrassingly bad.

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